There was a thread earlier that concluded that the solution is to host the IE Browser control in your COM-based app, and use the WinForm user control inside that control. Does that make sense?
At 11:07 AM 5/17/2004, David Garcia wrote (in part) [snip] >It appears that what is supported is the hosting of Windows Forms >controls within IE (as long as the client computer has the .NET >Framework installed). And there's good reason for this given that almost >every Active X container behaves slightly differently and causes >incompatibilities for the controls being hosted. > >Apparently, Windows Forms controls are tuned and tested for IE, and >hosting them in any other Active X container may not completely work. >This is why there is no automatic support for exposing Windows Forms >controls as generic Active X controls. > >That said has anyone been successful in doing this? Do you have any code >I can utilize? It's critical that I get this working for an upcoming >conference so I really need your help! Please advise me on what I may >need to do. Many thanks in advance! > > >Regards, >David Garcia >[EMAIL PROTECTED] >(781) 435-6969 J. Merrill / Analytical Software Corp =================================== This list is hosted by DevelopMentorŪ http://www.develop.com Some .NET courses you may be interested in: NEW! Guerrilla ASP.NET, 17 May 2004, in Los Angeles http://www.develop.com/courses/gaspdotnetls View archives and manage your subscription(s) at http://discuss.develop.com